Monday, September 09, 2013

R.I.P. Cal Worthington

Cal Worthington, the man responsible for the best used-car commercials in the history of television is dead at the age of 92.

From the Los Angeles Times:

If you watched television in Southern California in the 1970s and beyond, it was impossible to miss Cal Worthington, the lanky pitchman in the cowboy hat touting deals on a sprawling car lot with his "dog Spot." 

"Spot," however, was anything but a dog — think lion, tiger, bull, penguin, anteater, iguana, even a whale. And Worthington, the Oklahoma transplant who rode and wrestled with the exotic creatures in one of TV's wackiest and longest-running ad campaigns, kept the gag going for decades, building a cult following along with one of the most successful car dealerships west of the Mississippi. "Go see Cal" became a part of Southern Californians' vocabulary.


If you had cable TV in Santa Fe in the '70s chances are you saw Cal and his dog spot too. Back then the cable system mainly ran L.A. stations.

I thought Cal was a genius. I just regret I never had the opportunity to buy a car from him -- and maybe get a free elephant ride for the kids.

Here's how we'll remember Cal:




Sunday, September 08, 2013

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST


Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Sept. 8, 2013 
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M. 
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time 
Host: Steve Terrell, Guest Co-host Stan Rosen
Webcasting!
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell(at)ksfr.org

ANNUAL POST LABOR DAY SONGS FOR THE WORKIN' MAN 
Plenty Tuff and Union Made by The Waco Brothers
Solidarity Forever by J. Michael Combs & Stan Rosen (live)
Working Man's Blues by Merle Haggard & Willie Nelson
Union Fights the Battle of Freedom by Bucky Halker
There is Power in the Union by Solidarity Singers
Big Boss Man by Jimmy Reed

J. Michael Combs live set 
Which Side Are You On
Babies in the Mill
Gone, Gonna Rise Again
Arizona Estada de Verguenza
Banks of Marble
By the Sweat of My Brow
Roll the Union
Bread and Roses

Pie in the Sky by Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco
Talking Union by The Almanac Singers
Pastures of Plenty by Cedarwood Singers 
Joe Hill by Paul Robeson
Brother Can You Spare a Dime by Phil Alvin 
Working Man by Bo Diddley
Union Medley by Peter, Paul & Mary

Red Neck Blue Collar by James Luther Dickinson
Republic Steel Massacre by Acie Cargill
Don't Look Now by Creedence Clearwater Revival
I Say Union by The Rabble Rousers
How Can a Poor Man Stand Such Times and Live by The Del-Lords
Call My Job by Son Seals 
The Work Song by The Animals
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Friday, September 06, 2013

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Sept. 6, 2013 
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM 
Webcasting! 
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time 
Host: Steve Terrell 
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org
OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Cool Arrow by Hickoids
Leavin' Amarillo by Billy Joe Shaver
Whiskey's Gone by Kirk Rundstrom
Hooker Bones 2 by DM Bob & The Deficits
The Women ('Bout to Make a Wreck Out of Me) by Buddy Jones
Oklahoma Bound by Joe West
This Life of Mine by Two Tons of Steel
Gettin' High For Jesus by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs

The Pharmacist from Walgreen's by Gregg Turner
47 Crosses by The Goddamn Gallows
Do You Know Thee Enemy by Slim Cessna's Auto Club
Hellfire Remedy by Big John Bates
They Raided the Joint by Chuck Murphy
In My Time of Dyin' by Dad Horse Experience
Nine Miles Over the Limit by Rob Nikowlewski 
I'm Sending Daffydills by The Maddox Brothers & Rose
The Pill by Loretta Lynn

Yet Another Dang Self Portrait set 
Songs from Self Portrait, Another Self Portrait and Self Portrait songs by others
(All songs by Bob Dylan except where noted)
All the Tired Horses ( original version)
Annie's Going to Sing Her Song
Little Sadie by The Sadies
Working on a Guru
It Hurts MeToo by Elmore James
Railroad Bill by Hobart Smith
Belle Isle (Another Self Portrait version)
Wallflower by David Bromberg
The Mighty Quinn by Bob Dylan & The Band
Days of '49 by Doughbelly Price
Take a Message to Mary by The Everly Brothers
Pretty Saro by Iris Dement
Tattle O'Day

Over There's Frank by James Hand
Don't Monkey ' Round My Widder by Doc Watkins & Chet Atkins
You're All Bad (and That's Why You've Been Invited) by Eleni Mandell
Mr. Jukebox by Ernest Tubb
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Steve Terrell is proud to report to the monthly Freeform American Roots Radio list

New Zealand Singer in SF Tonight

My old pal and former Santa Fe musician John Egenes, who has been living in New Zealand for the past several years (rumors that he earns his living as a hobbit trapper are utterly false and hurtful), is bringing a New Zealand singer to town tonight.

Donna Dean is playing at 7:30 p.m. at Garrett's Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa Fe Trail. I've heard her and she's good. (I forgot to get a sub for The Santa Fe Opry tonight, or I'd be going.) Santa Fe's own Jono Manson is opening.

 Tickets are $15 advance/$20 at the door. So take a break from Fiestas and check it out.

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: New Dylan Portrait Reveals New Colors

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Sept. 6, 2013



It's interesting that Columbia Legacy would release an two-disc "bootleg" set of unreleased Bob Dylan recordings centered around one of his most critically un-acclaimed albums in his 50-year career.

But that's the case of Another Self Portrait (1969-1971) The Bootleg Series Vol. 10. About half the songs are alternative versions, demos, or cutting-room-floor songs originally meant for Self Portrait, Dylan's album (it was a double album in the days of vinyl, though it all fit on a single CD) Released in the summer of 1970. There also are several different versions of songs that appeared on New Morning, (which came only months after Self Portrait), plus a smattering from Nashville Skyline and other projects.

At the time of its release, Self Portrait was the most controversial thing Dylan had done since "going electric" at the Newport Folk Festival five years before. In his autobiography, Chronicles, Vol. One, Dylan described this album: "I just threw everything I could think of at the wall and whatever stuck, released it, and then went back and scooped up everything that didn't stick, and released that too."

The critics raved. Actually, the critics ranted and it wasn't pretty. It was as if they felt personally that the most important artist of a generation had released a record that wasn't a grand revelation. Instead, despite the portentous title, Self Portrait was just a fun and sometimes sloppy musical notebook of Dylan singing some favorite folk and country songs, mixed in with a few live recordings and musical experiments.

"What is this shit?"was the opening sentence of the review in Rolling Stone (in those days a rock 'n' roll magazine, believe it or not) by Greil Marcus. Marcus, in the liner notes for the new collection, wrote that those were "the words that were coming out of everybody's mouth" when first hearing Self Portrait.

But not everybody.

I was just a high school kid when Self Portrait came out and, for the most part I liked it. And for the most part, I still do. Sure there were some clunkers -- his undercooked version of Simon & Garfunkel's "The Boxer," the bafflingly over-produced "Bell Isle," the mediocre take on Elmore James' "It Hurts Me Too," and the outright bizarre "In Search of Little Sadie," which sounded like a stoned private joke. And, as is the case with many other classic double albums, Self Portrait could have, should have been boiled down to a single disc.


But there was so much to love in Self Portrait. The first song was the enigmatic "All the Tired Horses." Dylan didn't sing this. It was a chorus of three women singing, "All the tired horses in the sun / How am I supposed to get any riding done / Ummm ummm..." over and over again like some plantation dirge with a string section coming in. There was a raucous live version of "Quinn the Eskimo" (with The Band) that sounded like a saloon fight. And there was a straight version of "Little Sadie" on which Bromberg on guitar sounded so much like Doc Watson, I had to check the credits.

The Original
Speaking of "Little Sadie," my favorite aspect of Self Portrait was what seemed to be an Old West/frontier/gunslinger undercurrent. One of the best was "Alberta #1," a funky old folk song (I remembered it from seeing Parnell Roberts, Adam from Bonanza, perform it on some TV variety show.) "I'd give you more gold than your apron could hold" sounds like a love-sick promise by the world's horniest prospector.

Dylan's laconic version featured a tasty dobro by David Bromberg and call-and-response vocals by the same trio that sang "All the Tired Horses." Later in the album there was a slightly faster "Alberta #2" and I liked that too. (And, to get ahead of myself a little, I also like "Alberta #3" on Another Self Portrait, despite its abrupt end.)

One of the most moving songs on the album was a moonshiner ballad, "Copper Kettle" where Dylan, in the voice of a proud defiant hillbilly Everyman, sings, "My daddy he made whiskey, my granddad he did too / We ain't paid no whiskey tax since 1792." There was The Everly Brothers' "Take a Message to Mary," with that haunting introduction by a female chorus, "These are the words of a frontier lad, who lost his love when he turned bad..."

But best of all was Dylan's version of "Days of 49," an old gold rush song about a sad '49 lamenting the loss of old compadres, a motley, whoring gaggle of drunks, brawlers and card-cheats -- the kind of men who built this great land of ours. "They call me a bummer and a gin-shot too, but what cares I for praise?" Dylan snarls. The verses document the lives and violent deaths of pals like Poker Bill, New York Jake and Ragshag Bill.
David Bromberg, the secret hero of the
Self Portrait sessions.

The devastating final verse puts it all in perspective: "Of all the comrades that I've had, there's none that's left to boast / And I'm left alone in my misery, like some poor wandering ghost ..." Makes you wonder whether Dylan has harbored a fear of being the last man standing among his glory-days contemporaries.

"Railroad Bill," a fine old American outlaw ballad included in Another Self Portrait, would have fit in perfectly among the Old West tunes on the original album. Why it was excluded while "The Boxer" was included we'll never know.

While any fan of any performer enjoys hearing out-takes and versions of familiar songs at various stages of development -- "New Morning" with horns, "Wigwam" without the horns, "Sign on the Window" with orchestra! -- my favorite tunes on the new collection are the ones like "Railroad Bill," that I'd never heard Dylan do before. There are a few, such as "Annie's Going to Sing Her Song" (written by folkie Tom Paxton) and a folk song called "Pretty Saro" that can only be described as gorgeous.

For sheer fun, it would be hard to beat the bluesy "Working on a Guru," featuring George Harrison on guitar, from the New Morning sessions. And for the pure mystery of folk music, Dylan, backed by Bromberg's guitar and pianist Al Kooper, sings a song called "Tattle O'Day," full of nonsense lyrics of animals with fantastic powers.

While I prefer the familiar versions of the Self Portrait songs to the versions on the new "bootleg" collection, there are exceptions. Both "Copper Kettle" and "Belle Isle" are stripped of their over-dubbed sweetening strings, leaving performances that only seem more passionate.

If nothing else, Another Self Portrait is forcing a second look of the original Self Portrait. Maybe it wasn't as big of a revelation as Highway 61 Revisited or Blonde on Blonde. But in its own strange way, it had its own revelatory power.

Some video for yas:






Dylan's "Alberta"s are cooler, but Pernell's is the first version I heard.

Tuesday, September 03, 2013

Turner-Terrell Tango This Saturday at Jean Cocteau Cinema

Geniuses at work
Photo by Ronn Spencer

I'm very honored that my pal Gregg Turner and I have been asked to be the first musical entertainers to perform at George R.R. Martin's newly re-opened Jean Cocteau Cinema. This Turner/Terrell Tango will take place 9 p.m. this Saturday night, Sept. 7.

Tickets are $5 (cheap).

Turner, a mild-mannered math professor by day, is best known for being a former member of the Southern California punk rock band The Angry Samoans. His latest album is simply called Gregg Turner Plays the Hits. 

I'm probably best known as a newspaper reporter, though in a former life I had delusions of being a musician and actually released two albums -- Picnic Time for Potatoheads and Pandemonium Jukebox -- on the dynamic Blue Elf label.

Hope to see you Saturday.

Here's a little preview of the music:




Sunday, September 01, 2013

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

J
Terrell's Sound World Facebook BannerSunday, Sept. 1, 2013 
KSFR, Santa Fe, N.M. 
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time 
Host: Steve Terrell
Webcasting!
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrell(at)ksfr.org

 OPENING THEME: Let it Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Murky Waters by Big John Bates
Some Other Guy by The Hentchmen
Astral Plane by The Malarians
Mo Hair by Hickoids
Eviler by The Grannies
La Carta by Los Mustangs
Waiting for the Next Check by The Terrorists
Big Ass on Fire by The Pocket FishRmen
Thrift Baby by J.J. & The Real Jerks
Jump and Shout by The Dirtbombs

You Better Run by Iggy & The Stooges
Devil Again by Thee Oh Sees
Oscar Levant by Barrance Whitfield & The Savages
A Different Kind of Ugly by Sons of Hercules
Nice Guys Finish Last by The Electric Mess
The Train by Big John Hamilton
Shout by Question Mark & The Mysterians

Puzzlin' Evidence by Talking Heads
Hang Up by The Cramps
Nancy Sinatra by Johnny Dowd
Lightning's Girl by Nancy Sinatra
Sick Bed by The Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black
Pretty Girl Snatcher by Lovestruck
Switched to Drinkin' Gin by Mojo Juju
See It on Your Side by Dinosaur Jr.

Starry Eyes by Gregg Turner
Little War Child by The Oblivians 
She Done Him Right (Mae West Sutra) by Pietra Wexstun & Hecate's Angels
Don't Taser Me Bro by Carbon Silicon
When I Rise in the Morning byThe Drinkard Singers
All the Way by Richard Hell & The Voidoids 
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis

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Saturday, August 31, 2013

Shout the News! A New Big Enchilada Podcast!




Let the spirit of crazy rock 'n' roll move your soul. Enjoy two high-voltage sets of rock, soul and psychobilly, then free your soul with a final explosion of primal gospel sounds. Hallelujah!




Here's the playlist:
(Background Music: Shout! by Question Mark & The Mysterians)
Heebie Jeebies by Nick Curran & The Nightlifes
I'm a No Count by Ty Wagner
Gotta Get My Eyes Done by The Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black
Slipping Away by Mudhoney
Break the Ghost by Big John Bates
Must Be Desire by Mojo JuJu

(Background Music: Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate by New Orleans Feetwarmers)
Skulldiggin' by Black Joe Lewis 
Hey Cookie by The Dirtbombs
Jim Dandy by Tim Timebomb & Friends
In My Time of Dying by Coconut Kings
Big Bad John by Big John Hamilton
(Background Music: Hollerin' by The Campbell Brothers)

GOSPEL SET
Go Devil Go by Madam Ira Mae Littlejohn
I Love the Lord by Rev. Johnny L. Jones
Jesus Gave Me Water by The Stars of Faith
God Don't Like It by Rev. A. Johnson
Jonah by The Famous Davis Sisters
I'll Just Wave My Hand by Calvin Cooke & Grace Cooke





You like the gospel? I did a whole gospel episode a few years back called Steve Terrell's Gospel Favorites. There's also a gospel set on Madness & Glory. Feel the spirit!

THE SANTA FE OPRY PLAYLIST


Santa Fe Opry Facebook BannerFriday, Aug. 30, 2013 
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM 
Webcasting! 
10 p.m. to midnight Fridays Mountain Time 
Host: Steve Terrell 
101.1 FM
email me during the show! terrel(at)ksfr.org
 OPENING THEME: Buckaroo by Buck Owens & The Buckaroos
Side by Side Doublewides by The Hickoids
Goo Goo Muck by Southern Culture on the Skids
Mule Train by Tennessee Ernie Ford
Great Chicago Fire by The Waco Brothers with Paul Burch
Boogie Woogie Gal by Jack Padgett the Texas Wrangler
Between the Ditches by The Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
You're Still on My Mind by Courtney Granger
Chicken Stew by Sixtyniners
Angel is the Devil by The Supersuckers with Steve Earle
Little Community Church House by The Boys From Indiana

The Milwaukee Blues by J. Michael Combs
Shade Tree Fix It Man by Merle Haggard
Broken Moon by Rob Nikolewski 
Memphis by Carl Newman
Pancakes and Beer by Fortytwenty
Goddamn Holy Roll by Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs 
Maybelline by Marty Robbins
The Rubber Room by T. Tex Edwards & Out on Parole
Three Dollar Baby by Lawrence Bishop

Days of 49 by Bob Dylan
I Will Stay with You by Emily Kaitz with Ray Wylie Hubbard
Moss and Flowers by Ray Wylie Hubbard
Billy's First Ex Wife by Ronny Elliott
Your Sugar is All I Want by Pat Todd & The RankOutsiders
Two Tickets to Hell by Legendary Shack Shakers
Prohibition Rose by Ashleigh Flynn

Long I Ride by Robbie Fulks
Parts Unknown by Big Sandy & The Fly-Rite Boys
Empty Bottle by The Calamity Cubes
I'm Barely Hangin' On to Me by Miss Leslie & Her Juke Jointers
Blind Willie McTell by The Band
Grandma's Hands
CLOSING THEME: Comin' Down by The Meat Puppets

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Friday, August 30, 2013

TERRELL'S TUNEUP: I'm Just Wild About Hairy

A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican 
Aug. 30, 2013

Harry Chapin was an American singer-songwriter who was most famous for his early-1970s pop hits “Taxi” and “Cat’s in the Cradle.” A dedicated activist devoted to ending world hunger, Chapin died in a car accident in 1981 at the age of 38 on his way to perform a free concert in East Meadow, New York. He was a distant cousin of singer-songwriter Mary Chapin Carpenter.

None of this has anything to do with the music I’m about to discuss. But it occurred to me that fans of the San Antonio band known as The Hickoids might not realize where the name of the band’s new album, Hairy Chafin’ Ape Suit, came from. (On their website, Hickoid honcho Jeff Smith explains, “It was kind of one of those things where you just string some words together and it sounds amusing. It also echoed our derision for Harry Chapin, though I’m sure he was a nice man.”)

The title has a long history in the Hickoids mythos. Reportedly it was first mentioned in print nearly a quarter century ago. Back in 2010 the band teased us with The Hairy Chafin’ EP — a strictly limited release, according to the back cover of the CD — that included early recordings of four songs that would later be redone. And early this year, four songs from the new album appeared on a split LP with their friends and European tour buddies, The Grannies. (More on that below.)

Harry Chapin
Just who are these Hickoids? And who are they to besmirch the memory of a noble humanitarian like Harry Chapin?

They started out in San Antonio in the mid-1980s. Known as one of the first
progenitors of cowpunk, the group was more than just a sloppy country-western parody band. Sure, they could pull off a hilarious mock hillbilly weeper like “Driftwood 40-23” and a completely nutso cover of the Hee Haw theme. But many other songs were short on twang while full of rage, fire, and profanity (though never without a big Texas grin).

The original version of the group flamed out in the early ’90s, but after a decade of dormancy, they sprang back to life in the new century. And here’s a local angle: Santa Fe punk-rock vet (and current Austin resident) Tom Trusnovic (Monkeyshines, The Blood Drained Cows, The Floors, 27 Devils Joking) has been a full-fledged Hickoid for the past couple of years. He played drums for them on one tour and then switched to guitar.

As with the band’s earlier incarnation, this latest version of the group plays music that is raw trashy joy, a drunken joy ride down Thunder Road all the way to Armageddon.

Those who discovered The Hickoids through their previous record, Kicking It With the Twits (a twisted tribute to the British Invasion and English glam bands), might be surprised that many tracks from Ape Suit are more representative of the cow part of the cowpunk equation.

There’s “TJ,” a song of border-town debauchery, in which Smith drawls, “If you go to Tijuana, please don’t smoke no marijuana/It might be laced with heroin and PCP/Be a good Americano, don’t mess with Mexicanas/Your poor honey’s gonna miss you when you’re gone.” The song borrows from the melody and final refrain of “Me and Bobby McGee.”

The Hickoids pay subtle tribute to the late George Jones on a song called “If Drinkin’ Don’t Kill Me, Kill Me,” which sounds like country filtered through The Rolling Stones.
Hickoids live in Austin 2012

There’s “Side by Side Doublewides,” which is sung by guitarist Davy Jones and proposes a redneck solution to the age-old problem of personal space in a relationship.

And one of my favorites is “The Workingman’s Friend,” a lazy blues about a cut-rate gas station that starts out with a vow I’ve made to myself a few times: “If I can make it to that Workingman’s Friend/I’ll never play chicken with that gas gauge again.”

On other songs, the country is less obvious. The album starts out with a fierce, hard-driving rocker called “Fruit Fly,” which is a cover of a song by another San Antonio band, Loco Gringo. The Hickoids also help themselves to a tune by the Happy Dogs, another Alamo City band — the epic, near seven-minute “Stop It, You’re Killing Me.” It’s disgusting and filthy — the press release for the record says “Not suitable for terrestrial airplay!” Ooops! Anyway, it’s irresistible.

One of the funniest songs here is “Cool Arrow,” complete with cheesy synth — the same kind that has polluted too much Latino music since the 1980s. The narrator of this ditty fancies himself a lady’s man, bragging about his “bling bling” and his Camaro and proudly says people call him “Cool Arrow,” apparently oblivious to the fact that the phrase sounds like something dirty in Spanish.
There aren’t many cooler arrows than The Hickoids.

Also recommended:

* 300 Years of Punk Rock by The Hickoids and The Grannies. I’ve already talked about all the
Hickoids tracks here, so let’s get straight to The Grannies’ side of this red vinyl delight.

I was going to call this San Francisco group a “raw, hard-hitting, no-nonsense punk band.” But that’s not true.

These cross-dressing maniacs — they’re fond of grandmotherly frocks and muumuus — are extremely pro-nonsense and proud. I’m quite fond of their previous album, For Those About to Forget to Rock, and most of the songs here are at least as strong as that effort.

Grannies Live at SXSW
The Grannies’ contributions to this record are all previously unreleased tracks. The song that sums up their sound is “Cranked Up Really High,” though my favorites here are “Eviler” (mainly for the crazed guitar solo) and their seismic cover of the Nervous Eaters’ “Just Head.”

But there’s one song that’s a serious departure for the group. The Grannies go country — obnoxiously so — on “God Loves The Hickoids,” a tribute to their friends from Texas. I’m not sure who is playing the Jew’s harp on this one.

This irregular LP is available at the regular online places. And the whole thing is streaming for free on Soundcloud.

Enjoy some videos



And here's a classic:


And here's a spiffy Grannies video


TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

  Sunday, July 6, 2025 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrell Em...